P99 Mesoscale modeling at
high (but short of turbulence-resolving) resolution
Ching, Jason, University
of North Carolina, Rich Rotunno, Peggy Lemone, Pedro Jimenez, Branko Kosovic, Jimy Dudhia, National Center for Atmospheric Research, and
Alberto Martilli, CIEMAT,
Spain
This
Poster addresses an issue associated with meteorological modeling with fine [O(1km)] grid meshes. Scales resolved by these meshes are
small enough to capture features of the larger turbulent eddies that may exist
in the planetary boundary layer (PBL), but too large for the simulation of the
turbulent cascade that regulates their amplitude and structure, as would occur
in a Large-Eddy Simulation (LES) where grid meshes are O(10m).
Until recently larger [O(10km)] grid meshes were
typically used for mesoscale modeling, but now increases in computational
capability are making possible higher-resolution mesoscale modeling. PBL
parameterizations developed for the larger-grid-mesh simulations may in fact
set up situations in which the mesoscale model produces convectively unstable
motions, the reason being that in an attempt to represent observed heated-PBL
profiles, most parameterizations produce potential-temperature profiles that
are super-adiabatic over much of their depth. From the point of view of a
mesoscale model, however, these profiles are absolutely unstable and are prone
to producing circulations at the minimum resolved scale (typically 4-6 times
the horizontal mesh size) at short lead times since the growth rate is
inversely proportional to the resolved scale. Although the production of these
circulations corresponds to a real physical process, the smaller-scale turbulence
that determines the ultimate form taken by these motions (i.e. whether they be
regular or randomly distributed in space) depends on scales not resolved by the
mesoscale model. For mesoscale models with grid meshes O(1km),
the motions immediately downscale of the minimum resolved scale are too large
to fall within the inertial sub-range of turbulence and no theory based on
first principles exists for the parameterization of their effects. In the
present study we turn to simulations with resolution high enough to simulate
turbulent transfer (i.e. LES) as a guide to the physical regimes where
structural features such as quasi-steady, quasi two-dimensional circulations
may occur in the heated PBL.